baier. alexandria hoff is live with what s happening on the campaign trail. reporter: we don t know in totally who s going to take part in this debate like former president trump. last night he skipped the campaigning in iowa. the caucuses are exactly six months away, and some republicans feel lashing out against a popular republican governor is a misten by trump. the former president sat down with maria bartiromo for an interview tomorrow on sunday morning futures. if people think trump is going to be elected, you ll never have a recession. if people think i m not, you re going to have a depression. reporter: again, the former president has yet to commit to next month s debate. former e governor chris christie and senator tim scott are the latest candidates to have met the rnc donor requirements the take part. today is the filing deadline for campaigns to turn over their april to june fund raising reports to the fec. these are the totals as of yesterday. today s repo
where we meet the ai helping radiologists to diagnose cancer. you can see these little white dots. the ai is highly suspicious. and in the fast moving game of ai artwork, who owns what? and can artists protect their work? for some time artificial intelligence has been all around us. you might not have noticed it, but your video streaming services, social media feeds, the maps on your smartphones, they ve all been steadily improving their performance because the computers behind them have been learning. and then last year, something important happened. yeah. ai got human or at least it felt like it did. companies like google and openai started showing off stunning photorealistic images like these, all created by ai from short text descriptions. and then ai started having conversations with us. they were starting to generate stuff that felt human. this field of generative ai seems to have exploded so quickly. chatgpt is the single fastest growing application in human history.
us regulators have opened an investigation into openai, the microsoft backed startup behind chatgpt. the federal trade commission says it s looking into whether the ai chatbot could put consumers reputations and privacy at risk by publishing false information about them. open al s ceo sam altman says they will work with the ftc, saying, we protect user privacy and design our systems to learn about the world, not private individuals . michelle fleury in new york has more. the artificial intelligence company openai is facing a probe by us regulators. the federal trade commission, or ftc, sent a letter to the microsoft backed company asking for more information about its privacy and data security practices. the agency also wants to know if the ai tool harmed people by generating false information about them. since its launch, there has been a lot of noise about openai. this is the service that generates convincing human like responses to user queries and is expected to dramatic
correspondentjonathan blake. clu bs clubs don t pay the bills! stop on the strikes clubs don t pay the bills! stop on the strikes as clubs don t pay the bills! stop on the strikes as the - on the strikes as the government does not hope that afterjunior doctors walked out yesterday, they said the 6% rise offered yesterday was not enough. appointments and cancellations again, amounting to the ministers urging unions to the ministers urging unions to say yes to the increases offered, they warned they could be more common. i offered, they warned they could be more common. be more common. i think there will be a be more common. ! think there will be a new be more common. i think there will be a new wave be more common. i think there will be a new wave of be more common. i think there will be a new wave of strikes i will be a new wave of strikes in the nhs and what really needs to happen as the government needs to come to the table, pay a proper pay rise to these workers.
if the ai tool harmed people by generating false information about them. since its launch, there has been a lot of noise about openai. this is the service that generates convincing humanlike responses to user queries and is expected to dramatically change the way we get information online. it is already the subject of fierce debate, including over the accuracy of some of its responses and whether the company violated author s rights when it was training the technology. this spring, congress hosted the chief executive sam oldman for a hearing in which he called for regulation to be crafted for the emerging industry. not everyone believes they will have the ability to keep artificial intelligence in check. the man who built the biggest advertising company has been speaking to the bbc and said advertising companies need to self regulate on the ethics of using the technology. we have already taken a position that, example, we won t alter pictures. let s say we had a white actor,